Dear FRONTLINE,
I'm a white man who has been married to a black woman for
what will be 25 years this next April fool's day. And what
a wonderfully enlightening, frustrating, tearful,
strengthening and - in many respects - ordinary life it has
been.

We have found a certain level of acceptance in
this small southern city which is for both of our homeplace.
Our acceptance in the black community came easily for the
most part; in the white community it is: "well they are not
really from another planet and we might as well get use to
it since they look like they are going to stay".
Our families have been behind us, but of course that means
we have been out front.

We chose early on to be visible and not go into hiding
(it really took a long time for me to not be afaid)
but we are still isolated by racism - I guess it is
that "box" June Cross talked about. I believe it was white
greed and arrogance which build the box and that now it is
white cowardice that keeps it from fall apart.
Rick Hall
Texarkana, AR

Dear FRONTLINE,
Of all the interracial relationships I have known among my friends I have never seen
any of them have problems because of skin color. Their problems are those of other
couples no matter what the race. As a matter of fact they all have very special
relationships. Maybe it's because when they first meet, they are delighted by the
person inside the skin that is so different. Anyway, I'm tired of the media
focusing on the negative of interracial people and relationships. For every
unhappy person that blames their unhappiness on color, there are hundreds of happy
healthy human beings who bring that health and happiness to their relationships and
the world around them.
S.P.
Studio City, CA

Dear FRONTLINE,
I was moved by June's drive to find out all the details of her life, be they happy,
or sad. Coming from a family of many bi-racial marriages, it is nice to see what
has happened to the children of bi-racial parents. Interracial marriages are more
common than most people would have you believe. The fact that June and her half
sister literally lived the same life clearly backs up this statement. I would urge
anyone to see
this documentary. Kudos to June for not trying to sugar-coat the truth. Many would
not have been as brave as she. June was a success story. Can you imagine how many
bi-racial children of June's era that were not so lucky to grow in a generally
"normal" household. I know what it feels like to be looked at differently because
of the color of my skin,
but I always had my own race to go back to and to identify with. I do not know what
I would do if neither race that I belonged to accepted me. After viewing Secret
Daughter, I questioned
what I would do in June's mother's situation. I am still mulling over whether or not
I would have done the same. I think that Norma took the best option that she could.
Norma was married to
a black man in a time when that just was not done. Even now in the 90's interracial
couples still are viewed as taboo.
Joy Fowler
Shaker Heights, OH

Dear FRONTLINE,
I was deeply moved by the excellent Frontline production: Secret Daughter.
June Cross showed great personal courage, as did her mother, in bringing their
family
story to the screen. As the white father of an adopted black daughter I often wonder
about
the personal pain of the biological parents in giving up their beautiful child for
adoption.
There have been many struggles already along our path and I'm sure there will be
more to come
but I believe that by keeping involved with other black families and trying to
understand the
American Black history and culture, my wife and I can continue to support our child
as she
grows up here in the USA. The biases and undertones of racism are not solely from
the white
community - we have been subjected to comments and stares from the black community
too,
presumably espousing the longheld view of the Black Social Workers organisation who
say
that cross-racial adoption is a "bad thing". Unfortunately, in this "land of
opportunity"
there are many examples of continuing racism.
Thank you for a moving and stimulating story which I hope will soon be repeated.
Chris Ellis

Dear FRONTLINE,
Having been in an interracial relationship for 16 years, I feel that I can add
something to this discussion. What I have learned is this: Love is where you find
it, life is what you make it. If you are so lucky find a man or woman who treats
you the way you should be treated, you are fortunate indeed. I have been
fortunate; I am a woman who found a man who loves me, cares for me and stands with
me. The fact that I am Black and he is Caucasian is really of no moment, except to
those who have nothing else to talk about! Life is no dress rehearsal and I have
found it is far too short to become caught up in things that don't matter.
B.D.
New Jersey

Dear FRONTLINE,
I find the notion that, because one of a black person's immediate parents (e.g., a
parent) is white, that person is "bi-racial" or "multi-racial."
First, there isn't a black person in America who isn't "multiracial." For example
my last name is Crockett, I am a descendant of Davey Crockett's brother who had
sons by a slave he kept. That story is far from unique. The fact that blacks are
no longer jailed or lynched for such relationships doesn't make the children
something they weren't before.

Secondly, I am extremely concerned that being "bi-racial" is another way of saying
"I don't want to be thought of as black." Our children aren't taught "I don't want
to be white." But if their hair is too curly or their skin too copper to pass for
white, they still don't have to be black if they can be thought of as "bi-racial."
Well, although I have no more than 30% African blood, I'm black. I always was and
always will be.
Tabania L. Crockett

Dear FRONTLINE,
Regarding the comments you received from viewers on your documentary "Secret
Daughter," -- I did not see any comments from persons who experienced the same
rejection from their families as Norma did. True, our society is more accepting of
interracial relationships today than they were in the '50's and '60s. One need
only ask a passerby (i.e., someone who is NOT involved in an interracial
relationship) who will tell you how they see more mixed couples walking about town
so everything must be fine and dandy. But where are the people, especially the
white women who have raised bi-racial children on their own? And where do they
live? In an interracial neighborhood, a predominantly black neighborhood or in a
predominantly white neighborhood? Also, where are the comments from your readers
who also were disowned by their families but chose to keep and raise their
bi-racial child, in spite of the stares, whispers, rejection and disrespect from
others they encountered? I'm talking about the white women who had break. Either you have a backbone or you don't. Either you say this is me and most
importantly, this is my child, or you don't. I offer no criticisms for Norma or
for June. I only say I did it differently, and after seeing this program, I am
glad I did it my way.
KAP
Washington, DC

Dear FRONTLINE,
I have had black friends since high school. I am a 42 year old white female with no
college degree, but with > 20 yrs experience at a national research laboratory. My
profession involves highly specialized, technical, scientific work. I have many
black friends, some of whom are co-workers, some of whom are social acquaintances
through my children. My greatest hope is that my children will never have to feel
shame for having friends of other races. Both of my children have many black and
mixed-race friends. The only time they seem to feel uncomfortable is when adults
make an issue of it. Hopefully, their generation will be so much more accepting
and adaptable. With the economic shift toward downsizing in many large companies,
I fear that subtle and not-so-subtle discrimination of many forms will re-surface,
setting the affirmative action goals back to the early 70's when I first entered
the workplace. I cannot imagine working and socializing with only white males or
only white females. How boring!
Debbie Roberts
Kingston, TN

Dear FRONTLINE,
I am in an interracial relationship. I think that as long as both partners recognize
that conflict is inevitable, it can all possibly be worked out. I see other people
going into these situations claiming "it doesn't matter that one of us is white and
the other is black" (or Asian or Latino or Native American). This seems ridiculous
to me; of course it matters. What I hope is that if the two of us and our children
can openly discuss problems that will come up that we can at least acknowledge
where we are and that we have a right to exist.
After all its not like families that are all of one race don't have all sorts of
problems and issues to deal with. Most of the crime etc happens in one-race
families!
By the way, in case people haven't heard of it, Gregory Hines' film, TAP was a great
introduction to black entertainers of Jimmy Cross' era and their being trapped
by [or] in time.
Terri Barnes

Dear FRONTLINE,
I would like to thank you for dealing with a topic that most so-called Americans
find so disgusting: the mating of what they believe to be different 'races'.
Currently, I am teaching a course at the University Of Missouri-Columbia that
deconstructs the faulty, ignorant concepts upon which most people base their
beliefs [Anthropology and the Concept of Race, Anth 201]. The film strikes at the
very core of racism in practice [e.g. how the Mormons in her family considered
people with dark skin examples of original sin]; this exemplifies what I call
Silent Racism, which is the prevailing type of racism in America, and I define it
as "a practice, act, or event that is motivated by race, which is not verbally
acknowledged to be racially motivated, and is maintained by tacit approval from
generation to generation." Most Americans would say, when asked if they were a
racist, "I am not a racist," while they adhere to the One Drop Rule, attend
segregated churches, maintain 'separate but equal' from 9 to 5 and Aparthei
systematics of humans. Just maybe, if Anthropologists could make it perfectly clear
that the latest archaeological and genetic evidence confirms the East African
origin of humans, thus all humans are descended from a common ancestoral
population, and as Ernst Mayr of Harvard University wrote in 1970, "To speak of
pure races is sheer nonsense" (in Population, Species, and Evolution, Cambridge:
Harvard University Press). Though 'education' cannot 'solve' the problems of
racism, which permeate American life [e.g. Texaco, the riots in St. Petersberg,
Florida, and the like], there is little hope that a major solution is possible
without accurate information for public consumption. "Secret Daughter" is certainly
a step in the right direction, because its irony makes the viewer think; the most
recent anthropological information is the next step.
Sincerely,
Larry Ross

Dear FRONTLINE,
Love is love and it shouldn't matter if the persons in love just
happen to be of different races.
Some people fall in love with the person's color or belief of
a higher status because of that color. Some people really do love
their mate - REGARDLESS of color.
My only problem with interracial relationships is when a person
is only in love with skin color - but how do you know?
At any rate, if society could just "let go" of the issue of
two people of different races, colors, religions, or socio-economic
backgrounds, there would be know discussions such as this.
T.M.S.
Columbus, GA

Dear FRONTLINE,
My wife and I are a bi-racial couple, and have two beautiful daughters. All our
parenting efforts were directed toward making them feel independent and proud of
their mixed heritage. Your show merely brought out the sad truth that was so
evident in America in the fifties, the early sixties, it was fashionable to be
cool and accept multi-cultures; but from our experience we chose to raise our
children in a fairly affluent neighborhood, because I seriously believe that
bigotry is found most often in neighborhoods that consist of un-educated people. We
left a town when a neighbor cut down our fence with a chainsaw, and the police did
not side with us. We left this town and feel safer in a bigger town where people at
least respect you for the standard of living you can afford. Subtly, though, racial
prejudice is alive and well in America today, just sometimes it hides its ugly head
and does not appear as often.
Well done!
Joghee Tsang
Holden, MA

Dear FRONTLINE,
What a great program. It was alternately sad and happy. I am a white guy, 48,
married to a black woman, 49, for 15 years and we have a 10 year old daughter.
In our experience, we have had no troubles being an interracial couple, in fact,
lots of people seem to be overly nice to us, maybe to express some kind of support
for us. Our daughter is well liked by everyone she comes in contact with. So far
we have never had a bad experience with anyone due to our relationship. I guess
things are quite a bit better than they were in the 1950's.

My wife and I enjoyed the program immensely. June's narration was great. Thanks for
putting it on. Hopefully, you will rerun it in the future so people who missed it
the
first time will get a chance to see it.r
D. Haverkamp
Pasadena, CA

Dear FRONTLINE,
Being in an interracial marriage for 33 years now I was struck by the difference as
well as similarities between the early 50's as portrayed in Secret Daughter and our
experinces in the early 60's. We are in the generation right between June and
her mother. We seem to have had a much easier time than they did - perhaps we
learned quicly how to shelter our selves, staying primarily in Washington DC and
living our social life out in the context of a rather progressive
non-denominational church.

Yet, we have stories to tell: Being followed by
police. Being taken into 2nd Precint for a minor traffic violation. Not being
seated in downtown resturants, or seated way back in a corner by the kithen.
People driving over the curb or walking into lamp poles while looking at us. But
nothing too serious ever happened.

At first it was white people that had trouble
with our presence. In the 70's it was more black people reacting. Now - who cares
- rarely if ever any reaction, even out in the hinterlands.
We now have grown children with spouses - very mixed - our family heritage now
includes African, Native American, Euorpean, and Asian. I am in a white minority
in our family and feel it.

I have long held the belief that it is not fair or
right that people are labeled by the darker race of their heritage - why are my
children black instead of white or Native American - they have close to equal parts
- and anyhow what difference does it make. Culture is more important than race in
defining where a person comes from or how they are going to behave. I know a lot
of pretty white black people and a few pretty black white people. This is a total
oversimplifycation of complex thoughts that rose up from watching Secret Daughter.
I am being called to help with Thanksgiving dinner prep. I have more to say and
will write more another time.

For now I just want to commend and thank June Cross for sharing her life and
acknowlege the courage it took to do so on her part and all her friends and family
tha came out with her. ~Peter Mosher [one half of FudgeRoyal@msn.com] Once upon
a time there was the Fudge Royal gang - long before the days of cyber space & email
- we are all thats left. Anyone want to recreate it with us, on line if not in
person?
Peter Mosher

Dear FRONTLINE,
This is my second message to you, and this time I'll try to
say what I really mean. Secret Daughter demostrates
what the power of institutionalized racism has done
to American families over a period of not only decades
but centuries. I find it fascinating that both of June's
parents may have had mixed ancestry, but yet both were
"pigeon holed" into opposite categories.

I also applaud June's decision to identify herself as
African American because America with its long standing
rule on one drop of black blood has inherently made it
that way.

I am also tired of hearing about "mixed race" or "biracial"
or even "triracial" individuals lately. Who among us isn't
mixed with something! I am classified and proud to be
classified as an African American; but I have at least
one white great grandfather, one great grandmother
who was of Cherokee ancestry, a great great grandfather
who was half Choctaw, and a great great grandmother
who was mixed with Creek, etc. I have gotten back to the
late 1820s on some family lines, and I have yet to find
the full blooded African; but I continue to search.
In fact, there is another branch of my family which
is also African American; however, the common ancestor
linking our two families was white! When all things are
considered, my ancestry is probably really rather
typical of most late 20th century African Americans;
so I can't understand why we are trying to divide
ourselves further into more categories that really
aren't accurate.

Since he is in the press so much, I'll use him as an
example--O. J. Simpson--his two younger children really
aren't biracial as some have described them (a person would
have to have one pure black parent and the other parent of
pure white ancestry) because O. J. is himself of
"mixed" ancestry; so what does that make his
children?--hopefully just Americans.
G. H.
Dallas, TX

Dear FRONTLINE,
In response to the person from Kentucky who questioned
the viability of interracial relationships, I say that her
questions show a fundamental ignorance of history and of
the current situation in a variety of countries.
Interracial relationships (if they can be called that,
since there is no scientific substantiation for the idea
that there are distinct racial groups among human beings)
have always existed, and are the prevalent type of
relationships in many countries of the world, particularly
in Latin America (In fact, whole countries have been created
out of a mixture of races; eg. Morocco, Brazil, Puerto Rico,
the Dominican Republic, Phillipines, etc.). The United
States has experienced interracial relationships since
Europeans first arrived here and began mixing with the
Native Americans and with the Africans they imported to
these shores. It is uniquely American psychosis to pretend
that multiracial Americans are not an integral part of the
American fabric, and have been for centuries.

Furthermore, I am a Black woman married to a White man,and
we have three children. We have been married for ten years,
have never had any problem that concerned race with our
families, friends, co-workers, neighbors, etc. It helps
that we come from decent families, because I believe
American racism is premised on a lack of decency, in
addition to a shocking level of ignorance. It also helps
that we have always lived in fairly progressive communities
with large Hispanic populations (eg. California, New Mexico,
and South Florida). I can imagine that if a person lives
in some place as backwards as I believe Kentucky to be, then
they would have the perspective of that writer.

Our three children attract lots of attention because of
their beauty, exotic looks, and outgoing personalities. We
are constantly complimented by strangers as well as friends
about them. If we ever do encounter strangers with any
negative feelings about our family, we are certainly unaware
of it, and would not care in the least anyway. Everyone is
going to have a problem about something, and it is only an
extremely insecure person who would concern themselves with
the opinions of strangers. For people who think like that
writer from Kentucky, I say America is changing and they need
to"Get With the Program!"
M. M.
Miami, FL

Dear FRONTLINE,
I think an interracial relationship CAN work, and if someone is so stuck on the
approval of society for a personal relationship, then perhaps they would be better
off alone.
I am a African-American female in her early 20s, and my 26 year-old boyfriend is
white, blond hair no less, and we've gone out for over a year now. Neither one of
us, sees the other as an object or something "exotic", but as human beings. We've
had our share of troubles, mostly from his family concerning me, but I think we're
still together because our relationship also has a firm foundation in a most
important thing: friendship. No relationship can survive without that. If an
interracial relationship(or any relationship) is based upon one person seeing the
other as a toy or a fetish, or something not equal to themselves, it will fail.
I'm lucky that I've found someone that doesn't see me that way.
Amy Rutherford

Dear FRONTLINE,
A round of applause for June Cross for telling her very personal story
"Secret Daughter". Our family is second generation biracial and
faced the struggles of the 70's and 80' (with my own children) and the
questions and concerns of the 90's (with my granddaughter). We are
thankful that we had the strength and love to remain solid and
together.
A very special thanks to June's Mom for having the strength to
speak publically of her feelings and the issues she had to face
for making the choices in life that she did.
June, thanks for letting us into your world for a moment! We
look forward to seeing more of your fantastic work!
Malden, MA